GothamSchools — daily independent reporting on NYC public schools

Habari Gani

Promise and relief inside a new charter school on its first day

The city’s school year doesn’t officially begin for another two and a half weeks, but some students started classes today at a handful of charter schools with extended school years.

I visited one of those schools today, watching kindergarten and first-graders file into the brand-new Teaching Firms of America Charter School in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn.

When I arrived at 7:30 a.m., 15 minutes before the school officially opened its doors, already more than a dozen parents, with their children clung closely to their sides, had gathered by the main entrance of PS 308, where Teaching Firms of America is housed.

“I applied, but didn’t think I’d win,” said Damaris Rivera, a parent who won the lottery for admission into TFOA last spring. “I was excited, I was screaming. I couldn’t believe it.”

Rivera’s daughter was one of 100 students who filed through freshly painted halls to arrive at classrooms named after themes in African and African-American history, such as “Freedom” and “Umoja” (Swahili for “unity”). Inside, teachers worked to establish discipline guided by “choice theory.”

“It’s about students understanding that everything decision they make is a choice,” said Alisa Nutakor, the school’s dean.  Within a couple of hours, each classroom had at least one or two students who made a choice that prompted a time out from the class.

The school’s founder, Rafiq Kalam Id-Din, II told me that he was just relieved that the first day had come. Just four weeks ago, the school hadn’t begun to prepare its space because all charter school co-locations were in limbo while the city waited for a judge to rule on a UFT lawsuit to halt the space-sharing arrangements. Now his vision of replicating the lean structure of corporate law firms in an education setting was becoming a reality.

“This is why we did the work,” said Kalam Id-Din, II. “This is what it’s all about.”

The school’s culture, Kalam Id-Din II said, was designed to reflect the Bedford-Stuyvesant community and its rich African American heritage. Staff greet each other with the honorific “Brother” and “Sister” before their first names. And the Swahili phrase, “Habari Gani” – which translates to “What’s the good word?” — was repeated often in the opening hours.

Part of the “firm” structure, Kalam Id-Din II explained, is that nearly every staff member will play an instructional role. That includes Kalam Id-Din II himself. He excused himself from our conversation to duck into his first-grade classroom. “Good morning, little brothers and little sisters!” he greeted his students.

  • Anonymous

    “lean structure of a corporate law firm”?

  • guest

    Why would you ever want to replicate a corporate law firm for anything, let alone a school.  This is strange and sad.

  • Guest

    The word “firm” should give great pause.

  • flerpo

    structure of a corporate law firm = after 8 years, you’re fired or make partner. 

  • flerpo

    structure of a corporate law firm = after 8 years, you’re fired or make partner. 

  • Jake

    Geoff -  I think you should explain to your readers the way these schools are financed as most of us probably aren’t knowledgeable on that.  Where do they get most of their money?  Traditionally, the federal government has used “grant-in-aid” programs to give money to state and local agencies in exchange for them adopting national standards.  This way the federal government can achieve its goals without passing national legislation, but instead enticing states with money.  It would be interesting to know how these schools are funded and if they are therefore more or less autonomous from federal intrusion. 

  • Jake

    Geoff -  I think you should explain to your readers the way these schools are financed as most of us probably aren’t knowledgeable on that.  Where do they get most of their money?  Traditionally, the federal government has used “grant-in-aid” programs to give money to state and local agencies in exchange for them adopting national standards.  This way the federal government can achieve its goals without passing national legislation, but instead enticing states with money.  It would be interesting to know how these schools are funded and if they are therefore more or less autonomous from federal intrusion. 

Tips, questions, feedback?

Contact us at .

Word from Our Sponsor

Follow GothamSchools

RSS
Subscribe to the daily email digest:

Chalk It Up

Recent Comments

0 comments so far today

Archives

May 2013
M T W T F S S
« Apr  
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031